Excuse me for Latexing my homework here

Thank you MIF, I will delete it once I have printed out and handed in.I will download a pc program and learn to latex with the software, but it may take some time, so I came up with the idea of using the math command here temperarily.Excuse me.

Re: Excuse me for Latexing my homework here

Re: Excuse me for Latexing my homework here

This is actually something worth discussing in the Coder's Corner. A recent trend in software design is to break a piece of software down into divisible pieces. This does a number of things. First, each piece is smaller than the whole and much easier to develop. But more importantly, it allows for the user to choose between different pieces. You can switch your front end for latex (the user interface) without having to change the program used to compile and produce the pdfs. Latex is a beast, I could only imagine trying to code it. On the other hand, user interfaces are relatively easy. So instead of forcing everyone to program both, people can all just use MikTex and make the user interface over top of it.

"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."

Re: Excuse me for Latexing my homework here

Re: Excuse me for Latexing my homework here

Texmaker might be one good example of splitting a task into a subtask too small.

It looks pretty, much more pretty than Microsoft Word.It looks nice, every maths symbol ready to use.But where the hell can I get a bunch of Latex maths symbols out instead of a string of sheer commands like" \int e^{x}\dx=e^{x}"????????!!!!!!!!

Re: Excuse me for Latexing my homework here

Texmaker might be one good example of splitting a task into a subtask too small.

I strongly disagree. Writing a Tex compiler is a very intensive and difficult process, especially making sure that it conforms will all the Tex and Latex (let alone other types of Tex like BibTex) standards. Hell, there is a 120 page document that simply lists math commands. It is a huge library.

But where the hell can I get a bunch of Latex maths symbols out instead of a string of sheer commands like" \int e^{x}\dx=e^{x}"

I'm not certain what you mean. Are you saying you have a Latex document and can't figure out how to compile it into a pdf or dvi? Or is it something else?

"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."